Years ago when I had an old Willy's Jeep it also came with a crack in the crankcase. That crack turned into a hole before I knew it was there, or as bad as it really was, as a young teens/kid/stupid/just drove it and put oil in when I put gas in kind of time of life.I didn't have the money to replace a complete engine so I gave this it's first experiment of my life of using such a thing.... It held for MANY YEARS! Just some beater, must have had a million miles on it, beat up way before I ever purchased it for the $500 I paid. It just ran good and climbed any cliff I gave a challenge to it.Since then I've used it for the stupid stuff that didn't really require the total professional type repair, like today... On my property I've got a couple 1 1/2inch valves coming off my pump/well house to feed the fire hose and an old trough for what use to be grazing on this 40 acres way before I bought it. Both have been leaking for a while and getting to the nearest Depot or Lowes is a nearly 100 mile each direction trip from my rural as all residence in Cochise County, Arizona to pick up a new one. So, there was the remains of some I used years ago. Both of the 2oz tubes, only a slight bit remaining, using a needle nose to squeeze out what I needed to fix up each of the valves. It's still curing but This is only one example of the kind of a worthless if it works or not kind of job that's great for this stuff... I don't know... like an engine block?!?!..... (Not recommended but it did work for many years for my broke ash....)This is good for a BULKY REPAIR. Not like someone said about a handlebars for an exercise machine. Just ain't gonna happen for something like that. SPOT WELDS... Not really gonna do much either in many cases. Big, ugly, bulky, don't give a darn what it looks like in the end kind of project is what JBWeld is made for. Spit it on a flat surface, mix it equally, slap it on the ugly job that you don't care how it looks when completed and wait the, what/??? 4-6 hours, I think?? It holds quite well and does the lazy man's job of a repair.For the handlebars, get a wire feed, watch some youtube and fix it with a real weld, not something like JB...
Rating:
[5 of 5 Stars!]